EP0896231A2 - Optische Platte - Google Patents

Optische Platte Download PDF

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Publication number
EP0896231A2
EP0896231A2 EP98306165A EP98306165A EP0896231A2 EP 0896231 A2 EP0896231 A2 EP 0896231A2 EP 98306165 A EP98306165 A EP 98306165A EP 98306165 A EP98306165 A EP 98306165A EP 0896231 A2 EP0896231 A2 EP 0896231A2
Authority
EP
European Patent Office
Prior art keywords
areas
light
cladding
core
glass
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Granted
Application number
EP98306165A
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English (en)
French (fr)
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EP0896231B1 (de
EP0896231A3 (de
Inventor
Robert A. Sprague
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Xerox Corp
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Xerox Corp
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Publication date
Application filed by Xerox Corp filed Critical Xerox Corp
Publication of EP0896231A2 publication Critical patent/EP0896231A2/de
Publication of EP0896231A3 publication Critical patent/EP0896231A3/de
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of EP0896231B1 publication Critical patent/EP0896231B1/de
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

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    • GPHYSICS
    • G02OPTICS
    • G02BOPTICAL ELEMENTS, SYSTEMS OR APPARATUS
    • G02B6/00Light guides; Structural details of arrangements comprising light guides and other optical elements, e.g. couplings
    • G02B6/04Light guides; Structural details of arrangements comprising light guides and other optical elements, e.g. couplings formed by bundles of fibres
    • G02B6/06Light guides; Structural details of arrangements comprising light guides and other optical elements, e.g. couplings formed by bundles of fibres the relative position of the fibres being the same at both ends, e.g. for transporting images
    • G02B6/08Light guides; Structural details of arrangements comprising light guides and other optical elements, e.g. couplings formed by bundles of fibres the relative position of the fibres being the same at both ends, e.g. for transporting images with fibre bundle in form of plate

Definitions

  • This invention relates generally to fiber optic face plates and more particularly concerns methods in which a photoform glass can be etched and then the etched portions filled with either a melted low index glass, plastic, or a dark matrix material for fabrication of fiber optic faceplate equivalents.
  • Fiber optic faceplates are useful in the construction of liquid crystal displays as disclosed in U.S. Patent No. 5,442,467, filed on March 21, 1994, by Silverstein et al.
  • U.S. Patent No. 5,442,467 discloses a direct-view rear-illuminated LCD device, comprising: a backlight source; a rear diffuser layer; a rear polarizer; a LC cell including a rear glass layer with addressing elements and indium tin oxide (ITO) transparent pixel electrodes, a LC layer having a top and bottom surface, and a front FOFP as a front containing element of the LC cell and being located directly in contact with the top surface of the liquid crystal layer; a mosaic array of color absorption filters either deposited on the front face of the FOFP or located on a separate but adjacent substrate; and a front polarizer or analyzer.
  • the front polarizer or analyzer may be constructed from thin-film materials and located between the top or light exit surface of the LC layer and the bottom
  • An FOFP comprises an array of individual optical fibers which are fused together with an interstitial cladding material and then cut and polished to a desired thickness to form a plate.
  • the creation of FOFPs with varying optical characteristics is well known in the art.
  • the optical fibers are designed to transmit through total internal reflection light incident at controlled input or acceptance angles while rejecting or absorbing light incident at larger angles.
  • Light entering the fibers at an entrance plane of the FOFP is collected over a wide acceptance angle ⁇ Max IN by use of a high numerical aperture (NA) FOFP and/or coupling to a boundary of low refractive index (e.g., air).
  • NA numerical aperture
  • Light exiting the optical fibers of an exit plane of the FOFP is made to diverge or exit over a relatively wide angle ⁇ Max OUT also by use of a high NA and/or the ultimate coupling to a low refractive index boundary.
  • FOFPs with low NAs and/or coupling to relatively high refractive index materials restrict the light output exit angle, OUT, of the exit plane of the FOFP and the light input acceptance angle, ⁇ Max IN, of the entrance plane of the FOFP, respectively.
  • Light beam 16 enters the optical fiber 10 within the acceptance cone 20 defined by an angle ⁇ max, which is measured from normal line N and is totally internally reflected within a core 12 of the optical fiber 10 to propagate down the length of the optical fiber 10, essentially without loss.
  • the normal N is perpendicular to an entrance plane 30 and an exit plane 32 of the optical fiber 10. If the relative index of material surrounding the optical fiber 10 at the entrance plane 30 and exit plane 32 surfaces (N o ) is the same, then the light beam 16 will exit the optical fiber 10 at the same angle, in this example ⁇ max, which it entered.
  • Light beam 18, which enters the optical fiber 10 outside of the acceptance cone 20 defined by ⁇ max is not fully guided through the length of the optical fiber 10 and "leaks" out of the optical fiber 10 into adjacent cladding material 14.
  • Light beam 16 is a guided light beam while light beam 18 is an unguided light beam.
  • An unguided or partially guided light beam may pass through the cladding material 14 and enter other fibers in a fiber-optic bundle or fused faceplate. However, unguided or partially guided light beams typically leak out of these fibers as well and continue to traverse the bundle or faceplate.
  • Figures 2 and 3 show the effects of varying the numerical aperture of the optical fiber 10.
  • Figure 2 shows the optical fiber 10 having a small numerical aperture and thus a smaller light acceptance cone 20.
  • Figure 3 shows the optical fiber 10 having a large numerical aperture and thus a larger light acceptance cone 20.
  • the higher the numerical aperture of the fiber 10 the larger ⁇ max at the entrance plane 30 and the exit plane 32.
  • a light ray 24 and a light ray 26 can be seen entering the optical fiber 10 at the entrance plane 30 at an angle ⁇ max measured with respect to a normal N.
  • Light ray 24 is parallel to light ray 26 and they enter the optical fiber at different points on the entrance plane 30.
  • both guided and unguided rays undergo azimuthal rotation.
  • the consequence of this rotation is that the optical fiber 10 averages about the azimuthal position all of the incoming light entering at a given declination angle such that the output consists of a hollow exit cone 22 with a solid angle of twice the entrance angle.
  • the solid angle of the hollow exit cone 22 is 2 ⁇ max.
  • the transmitted light intensity is equal at all azimuthal angles. It is this property of azimuthal averaging that enables FOFPs to produce symmetrical viewing characteristics over wide angles when coupled to a LCD with inherent anisotropies in luminance and contrast.
  • any plate which has columnar features approximately in the direction of light propagation which are capable of total internal reflection, a controllable numeric aperture (NA) at input and output surfaces, rotational azimuthal averaging and translation of the object plane from a back surface of the plate to a front surface of the plate is the optical equivalent of a FOFP.
  • FOFP diffraction is responsible for anomalous reductions in on-axis contrast for coupled LCDs. Establishing this causal relationship would enable the development of effective means to reduce these observed reductions in on-axis LCD contrast.
  • TN twisted-nematic
  • STN super-twisted nematic
  • the angular distribution of diffracted off-axis light is quite large and a significant amount of the off-axis light is diffracted into the small light acceptance cone of the observer 34 or measurement instrument.
  • the off-axis light from the LCD (and corresponding contrast degradations) are diffracted by the FOFP cladding 14 apertures into the small light acceptance cone of the observer 34 or instrument resulting in significant degradation of on-axis contrast performance of the FOFP-coupled LCD.
  • an optical plate comprises
  • optical properties mentioned above can be imparted to a range of materials, thus producing the FOFP optical equivalents.
  • This application discusses a method employing irradiation sensitive glasses and creating adjacent areas with differing refractive indices which result in a substrate containing a plurality of cylindrical features whose boundaries are defined by a discontinuity of refractive indices wherein the index of refraction within the cylindrical features is greater than the index of refraction at the boundaries and external to the cylindrical features.
  • a substrate containing a plurality of cylindrical features whose boundaries are defined by a light blocking material is created.
  • the invention produces substrates containing a plurality of cylindrical features whose boundaries are defined by a discontinuity of refractive indices wherein the index of refraction within the cylindrical features is greater than the index of refraction at the boundaries.
  • the resultant plates contain adjacent areas with differing refractive indices which result in a substrate containing a plurality of cylindrical features whose boundaries are defined by a discontinuity of refractive indices wherein the index of refraction within the cylindrical features is greater than the index of refraction at the boundaries and external to the cylindrical features.
  • irradiation sensitive (photoreactive) glass substrate 40 is shown.
  • the important property of irradiation sensitive glass is a sensitivity to light which alters properties of the glass such as the etch ratio of those portions of the glass exposed to UV light.
  • One example of such a glass is Peg-3 glass or Fotoform glass (both available from Hoya Corporation in Tokyo, Japan) which, when irradiated, change from a non-crystalline or amorphous structure to a crystalline structure.
  • the etch ratio of crystalline glass is approximately fifty times that of amorphous glass.
  • the glass substrate 40 is irradiated with collimated UV radiation 62 through a mask 60.
  • a top view of the mask 60 is shown in Figure 10.
  • the mask 60 is divided into opaque core non-irradiation areas 68 and transparent cladding irradiation areas 70.
  • the collimated UV radiation 62 will not pass through the core irradiation areas 68 of the mask 60 and therefore not strike the glass substrate 40 in the "core” areas 64.
  • the "core" areas 64 will therefore remain as amorphous glass.
  • the collimated UV radiation 62 will pass through the cladding irradiation areas 70 of the mask 60 and strike the glass substrate 40 in the "cladding" areas 66, thereby altering its characteristics in the "cladding” areas 66.
  • the "cladding" areas 66 have become crystalline glass with a much higher etch rate than the amorphous glass in the "core” areas 64.
  • the glass substrate is now subjected to an etch bath with the result as shown in Figure 11.
  • the best known differential etch rate would be obtained form using a 5% hydrofluoric acid solution (5% HF) which would achieve a 50:1 differential etch rate between the "cladding" areas 66, which are crystalline glass, and the "core" areas 64, which are amorphous glass.
  • the glass substrate 40 is immersed in an etchant bath for a sufficient period of time to partially etch and remove the "cladding" areas 66 leaving a remaining portion 72 of the "cladding” areas 66 and an etched portion 74 of the "cladding” areas 66 as shown in Figure 11.
  • the "cladding" areas 66 are not completely etched away so that the remaining portion 72 of the "cladding” areas 66 can be used to provide structural support.
  • the third phase of the annealing process is to hold the temperature constant for at least 45 minutes to allow annealing to occur.
  • the glass substrate 40 may be cooled back to room temperature at a rate of approximately 150 +/- 50 degrees centigrade per hour for further processing.
  • the etched portion 74 may be filled with a suitable low index fluid. However, this then requires the addition of a thin glass or plastic liquid retaining plate 84 on the etched surface of the glass substrate to hold the liquid in contact with the glass substrate 40. If opaque cladding apertures are desired, the liquid retaining plate may be coated with a thin layer of light blocking material 86 over the "cladding" areas 66 to provide for the opaque cladding apertures as is known in the art.
  • a perspective view of a liquid retaining plate 84 with light blocking material 86 applied to one surface of the liquid retaining plate 84 is shown in Figure 14. The "core" area 64 are not covered by the light blocking material 86.
  • the light blocking material 86 be on the outward surface of the assembly and not on against the etched surface of the glass substrate 40, as shown in Figure 13.
  • the device may still function if the liquid retaining plate 84 with the light blocking material 86 is assembled such that the light blocking material 86 is against the etched surface of the glass substrate 40, having the light blocking material 86 on the outside surface is preferable.
  • Figure 15 shows the glass substrate 40 having been divided into columnar features that make up the "core” areas 64 and the surrounding material that make up the “cladding” areas 66.
  • the columnar features making up the “core” areas 64 extend substantially from a light entrance plane 30 to a light exit plane 32. When in use light generally enters the "core” areas at the light entrance plane 30, propagates through the "core” areas 64 and generally exits through the light exit plane 32.
  • Both the "core” areas 64 and the “cladding” areas 66 have indices of refraction with the "core” areas 64 having an index of refraction greater than the "cladding" areas 66 sufficient to promote internal reflection of light entering the "core” areas 64.
  • the "cladding” areas 66 have two portions. The remaining portion 72 of the original material that was not etched to provide structural support and the low index glass or plastic 76 that was used to fill the etched portion 74.
  • Figure 16 shows the glass substrate 40 having been divided into columnar features that make up the "core” areas 64 and the surround material that make up the “cladding” areas 66.
  • the columnar features making up the “core” areas 64 extend substantially from a light entrance plane 30 to a light exit plane 32. When in use light generally enters the "core” areas at the light entrance plane 30, propagates through the "core” areas 64 and generally exits through the light exit plane 32.
  • Both the "core” areas 64 and the “cladding” areas 66 have indices of refraction with the "core" areas 64 having an index of refraction greater than the "cladding” areas 66 sufficient to promote internal reflection of light entering the "core” areas 64.
  • the "cladding" areas 66 are at least partially of a light blocking material, preferably at the exit plane 32 surface to prevent diffracting off-axis light into the observer's viewing cone resulting in improvements in the on-axis contrast performance of FOFP-coupled LCDs. It should be noted that the "cladding" areas 66 have two portions. The remaining portion 72 of the original material that was not etched to provide structural support and the light blocking material 76 used to fill the etched portion 74.
  • the glass substrate 40a is divided into two types of areas, "core” areas 64a and “cladding” areas 66a.
  • the "core" areas 64a In order for the glass substrate 40a to operate as a FOFP, the "core” areas 64a must exhibit total internal reflection of any light entering the "core” areas 64a. In order for total internal reflection to take place within the "core” areas 64a, an index of refraction (n core ) for the "core” areas 64a must be greater than an index of refraction (n clad ) for the "cladding" areas 66a.
  • the glass substrate 40 is irradiated with collimated UV radiation 62a through a mask 60a.
  • a top view of the mask 60a is shown in Figure 18.
  • the mask 60a is divided into transparent core irradiation areas 78 and opaque cladding non-irradiation areas 80.
  • the collimated UV radiation 62a will not pass through the cladding non-irradiation areas 80 of the mask 60a and therefore not strike the glass substrate 40a in the "cladding" areas 66a.
  • the "cladding" areas 66a will therefore remain as amorphous glass.
  • the collimated UV radiation 62a will pass through the core irradiation areas 78 of the mask 60a and strike the glass substrate 40a in the "core” areas 64a, thereby altering its characteristics in the "core” areas 64a.
  • the "core” areas 64a have become crystalline glass with a much higher etch rate than the amorphous glass in the "cladding" areas 64a.
  • the glass substrate 40a is immersed in an etchant bath for a sufficient period of time to partially etch and remove the "core" areas 64a leaving a remaining portion 72a of the "core” areas 64a and an etched portion 74a of the "core” areas 64a as shown in Figure 15.
  • the "core” areas 64a are not completely etched away so that the remaining portion 72a of the "core” areas 64a can be used to provide structural support.
  • the glass substrate 40a is annealed to smooth the edges of the etched portion 74a of the "core" areas 64a in the glass substrate 40a.
  • the specifics of the annealing process will vary with the particular type of glass substrate 40a used. However, if PEG-3 glass available from Hoya is used then the preferred annealing process should proceed in the four phase process described previously.
  • the etched portion 74 in the "core" areas 64a of the glass substrate 40a can then be filled with a melted high index glass, epoxy or plastic 82 as shown in Figure 20.
  • a variety of materials can be used such as napthal methacrylate or vinyl carbazole.
  • the etched portion 74a may be filled with a suitable high index fluid, such as cassia oil or carbon disulfide.
  • a suitable high index fluid such as cassia oil or carbon disulfide.
  • the liquid retaining plate may be coated with a thin layer of light blocking material over the "cladding" areas 66a to provide for the opaque cladding apertures as is know in the art.
  • the liquid retaining plate 84a is identical to the one shown in Figure 12c.
  • the "core" area 64a is not covered by the light blocking material 86a.
  • the glass or plastic 82 in the "core" areas 64a have a higher index of refraction than the "cladding" areas 66a in order for total internal reflection to take place within the "core" areas 64a.
  • Figure 22 shows the glass substrate 40a having been divided into columnar features that make up the "core” areas 64a and the surrounding material that makes up the "cladding” areas 66a.
  • the columnar features making up the “core” areas 64a extend substantially from a light entrance plane 30 to a light exit plane 32. When in use light generally enters the "core” areas at the light entrance plane 30, propagates through the "core” areas 64 and generally exits through the light exit plane 32.
  • Both the "core” areas 64a and the “cladding” areas 66 have indices of refraction with the "core" areas 64a having an index of refraction greater than the "cladding” areas 66a sufficient to promote internal reflection of light entering the "core” areas 64a.
  • the "core” areas 64a have two portions. The remaining portion 72a of the original material that was not etched to provide structural support and the high index glass, epoxy or plastic 82 that was used to fill in the etched portion 74a.
  • this is an example only and any suitably transparent glass or plastic with an index of refraction between approximately 1.55 and approximately 1.80 may be used with the Fotofrom glass to provide an appropriate numeric aperture.

Landscapes

  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • General Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Optics & Photonics (AREA)
  • Optical Fibers, Optical Fiber Cores, And Optical Fiber Bundles (AREA)
  • Liquid Crystal (AREA)
  • Devices For Indicating Variable Information By Combining Individual Elements (AREA)
  • Light Guides In General And Applications Therefor (AREA)
  • Optical Couplings Of Light Guides (AREA)
EP98306165A 1997-08-05 1998-08-03 Optische Platte Expired - Lifetime EP0896231B1 (de)

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US08/906,222 US6160606A (en) 1997-08-05 1997-08-05 Optical equivalents of fiber optic face plates using irradiation sensitive glass
US906222 1997-08-05

Publications (3)

Publication Number Publication Date
EP0896231A2 true EP0896231A2 (de) 1999-02-10
EP0896231A3 EP0896231A3 (de) 1999-12-22
EP0896231B1 EP0896231B1 (de) 2009-11-25

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Family Applications (1)

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EP98306165A Expired - Lifetime EP0896231B1 (de) 1997-08-05 1998-08-03 Optische Platte

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US (1) US6160606A (de)
EP (1) EP0896231B1 (de)
JP (1) JP4410862B2 (de)
DE (1) DE69841296D1 (de)

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
FR2888952A1 (fr) * 2006-06-13 2007-01-26 Itt Mfg Enterprises Inc Plaque frontale a fibres optiques a plaquage absorbant et sa methode de realisation, et dispositifs comportant une telle plaque
US7251400B1 (en) 2005-06-13 2007-07-31 Itt Manufacturing Enterprises, Inc. Absorptive clad fiber optic faceplate tube
EP4252047A4 (de) * 2020-11-26 2024-10-23 SCHOTT Corporation Lichtisolierende arrays

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JP4403596B2 (ja) * 1999-03-05 2010-01-27 ソニー株式会社 光学的素子及び光学的素子用の基体
US6622392B1 (en) * 1999-03-19 2003-09-23 Laser Alignment, Inc. Target with diffractive elements for use with laser beam generating devices
US6945708B2 (en) * 2003-02-18 2005-09-20 Jds Uniphase Corporation Planar lightwave circuit package
CN101566700A (zh) * 2008-04-25 2009-10-28 鸿富锦精密工业(深圳)有限公司 光圈片、光圈片的制造方法及使用该光圈片的镜头模组
US20100073328A1 (en) * 2008-09-25 2010-03-25 Brian Lynch Anisotropic optical cover for touch panel display
US8977090B2 (en) 2012-11-29 2015-03-10 Delphi Technologies, Inc. Contoured display
PL229961B1 (pl) * 2016-04-21 2018-09-28 Polskie Centrum Fotoniki I Swiatlowodow Urządzenie do selektywnego zwiększania strat modów wyższych rzędów
CN116569085A (zh) * 2020-11-26 2023-08-08 肖特公司 光隔离阵列
JP2024535802A (ja) * 2021-09-13 2024-10-02 コエルクス・ソチエタ・ア・レスポンサビリタ・リミタータ 光学フィルタおよびそれを備えた照明ユニット

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Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US7251400B1 (en) 2005-06-13 2007-07-31 Itt Manufacturing Enterprises, Inc. Absorptive clad fiber optic faceplate tube
FR2888952A1 (fr) * 2006-06-13 2007-01-26 Itt Mfg Enterprises Inc Plaque frontale a fibres optiques a plaquage absorbant et sa methode de realisation, et dispositifs comportant une telle plaque
EP4252047A4 (de) * 2020-11-26 2024-10-23 SCHOTT Corporation Lichtisolierende arrays

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
EP0896231B1 (de) 2009-11-25
DE69841296D1 (de) 2010-01-07
JPH11119038A (ja) 1999-04-30
EP0896231A3 (de) 1999-12-22
JP4410862B2 (ja) 2010-02-03
US6160606A (en) 2000-12-12

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